Today Jeff Wood and his two friends made the long journey, driving 13 hours overnight from the East Coast, to pay tribute to his friend Jeff Burrell.

"It's kind of surreal to be here right now. There's a connection, it feels you know, it feels strange but it feels like the right thing," Wood said.

Burrell, along with 63 other passengers and 4 crew members, would never make it.All perished in the crash after the plane encountered severe icy conditions, according to authorities.

"That plane should have never been flying in these weather conditions," said Pat Sheridan Duprey, who lost her oldest brother Frank in the crash. "Frank got on the plane to get on an earlier flight because he was closing on a house that afternoon."

Following the crash, families of the victims demanded more answers and better rules and regulations.

"The news media was the only way of finding out what was going on," Durpey said.As a result, the Aviation Disaster Family Assistance Act of 1996 was passed and ensured victim's families receive information in crashes.

"Policies and procedures were built and created on an enormous amount of trauma, and stress, and grief and loss, and I hope that message never goes away as we continue this type of work for the next 25 years," said Jen Stansberry, who also lost someone on the flight that day.

Since the 20th Anniversary of the crash, families have stopped formally organizing annual events, however, it doesn't keep them or the community from coming to this memorial to pay tribute to those 68 souls.